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title1. Search the logs in multiple ways.

You can search the logs with words, date/time, and message type.

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title2. Here you can see the log size for this particular component.

Click Delete to delete the logs for this component.

Note

Deleting the logs cannot be undone.

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title3. Here you can see the total log size of all components.

Click on Stats to be taken to Log Usage for a full summary.

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title4. Log Symbols - Log Message Types

Learn more about all the message types here: Log Message Types

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title5. Context View

See upstream and related messages in the Context View.

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title6. Log Details

Click the ellipsis to view all log details.

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title7. Look at the way logs are stored on the disc.

You can physically examine how Iguana stores the log files.

In Mac OS X:

You can physically examine how Iguana stores the log files. In Mac OS X:

  • Copy the location

  • Open the Finder application

  • Use the Shift + ⌘ + G to open a window that lets you change the directory which you can copy paste the logs location into:

In this way you can see how Iguana stores the logs for each component:

Each component has its own directory.

Each directory represents hexadecimal digits in Unix epoch time. Unix epoch time is the number of seconds since January 1st 1970. The structure of logs is design to facilitate fast random access to the data and makes it fast to dequeue and search the log data.

Learn more about the Logs:

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